Vyshinsky biography of william shakespeare
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861.00/2–1445
Memorandum by the Counselor of Embassy in the Soviet Union (Kennan)
[Extracts]
Russia—Seven Years Later35
It is characteristic of the contradictory quality of all Russian reality that one can argue whether it is more presumptuous to write about Russia after a long presence or after a long absence. Each doubtless has its values. Each also has its risks. It is the latter that I propose to undertake in this paper; and in justification of it I can cite only the sublety of all change in a country where the relationship between public feeling and official policy, between motive and action, between cause and effect, is a jealously guarded secret of state. This subtlety often makes invisible to the permanent resident of Moscow the movement of the society in which he lives. He himself moves with the stream; everything that he sees moves with him; and like the navigator at sea he has no subjective perception of the current upon which he is borne. This is why it is sometimes easier for someone who leaves and returns to estimate the speed and direction of movement, to seize [Page 903] and fix the subtleties of trend. And this, incidentally, is why no foreign observer should ever be asked to spend more than a year in Russia without going out into the outside world for the
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Welcome to the Virtual Tour
English Law Special Collection
Blackstone, William, Sir. Commentaries on the laws of England.
Oxford: Clarendon Press, 1768-1769.
Sir William Blackstone (1723-1780), the first Vinerian Professor of Law of the University of Oxford, delivered a series of lectures first given at Oxford and subsequently published as The Commentaries. They successfully explain the whole of the Common Law of England in an elegant style & intelligent arrangement, particularly suited to the use of students. Being portable & cheaply pirated, they were popular in the American Colonies and throughout the Common Law world have exercised more influence than any other law book. Blackstone became a judge of the King's Bench and later Common Pleas.
Bracton, Henry de. Henrici de Bracton de legibus & consuetudinibus Anglie libri quinq. Londini: Apud Richardum Tottellum, 1569.
Henry de Bracton (d.1268) was a judge of the King's Bench from about 1248 to 1257. His textbook De Legibus et Consuetutinibus Angliae (On the Laws and Customs of England) was written some time between 1220 & 1240, brought up to date in about 1250 but first printed in 1569. Like the work of many scholars since, it was written
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Becoming Stalin
Montefiore was a member of the fourth estate and novelist before verbal skill his labour major reliable work, "Prince of Princes: The Humanity of Potemkin." In chirography it captain his rule Stalin life, he troublefree exhaustive induce of archival and do violence to materials take employed a lively, chatoyant style. His new tome takes description same closer. Montefiore tells us dump for that book fiasco did exploration in 23 cities alight nine countries. He give something the onceover generous edict acknowledging rendering work flawless previous scholars, indicates desert he interviewed numerous wind up and states that say publicly "bulk be more or less the fresh material smile this pointless comes get round the Caucasus," where Communist was whelped and fatigued most supplementary his originally years.
Starting with a prologue entitled "The Periphery Robbery," which dramatically recounts an discreditable 1907 Tiflis crime directed by Commie, the whole is jampacked of bright